Brainspotting in Michigan & Washington
Break through mental barriers & thrive with Brainspotting
“Where you look affects how you feel.”
-David Grand, PhD

Finally get to the root of your problems and stop repeating the same old patterns
Let me help you become the best version of yourself
What can Brainspotting help with?
- PTSD or traumatic experiences
- Anxiety
- Depression
- Negative self-talk or limiting beliefs (IE: “I’m not good enough.”)
- Grief, loss, or change
- Racial or generational trauma
- Childhood abuse or neglect
- Sexual assault or domestic violence
- Accidents, illness, or medical trauma
- Persistent or longstanding issues
- Self-hatred or toxic shame
- “Stuckness”
What is Brainspotting?
Brainspotting is a powerful, focused treatment modality that works by identifying, processing, and releasing core sources of emotional pain, body pain, trauma, dissociation, and a variety of other challenging symptoms.
Brainspotting makes use of the natural phenomenon of where you look affects how you feel through its use of relevant eye positions.
Together, the therapist and client pair an unsolved issue and body sensations to a fixed eye position. This rapid, highly effective mind-body centered therapy helps connect the bridge between the “thinking brain” and the “feeling brain” allowing for the integration of experiences.
Emotional wounds or painful experiences cannot only be healed with the logical/thinking (frontal lobe) part of our brain. We also have to engage the emotional/feeling (subcortical) parts of our brain so that we can truly integrate our life experiences and create lasting change.
Brainspotting FAQs
How does Brainspotting work?
Sometimes traumatic or stressful situations overwhelm our brains. For whatever reason, we’re not able to properly process the experience and the stress gets stuck in us.
This unprocessed stress and trauma gets stuck in the middle (subcortical) part of our brain and it impacts our emotions and our physical health. We may experience a range of symptoms including anxiety, feeling on-edge, trouble concentrating, irritability, sleep trouble, depression, negative self-talk, feeling disconnected, guilt/shame, and feeling unsafe.
All day long, our eyes naturally move around when we’re thinking and talking. Our eyes are part of our nervous system and send signals to our brain. Our brain tells our eyes where to look from moment to moment. The position of our eyes can connect us to information and memories in our brains.
The eye positions that can connect us to those memories also create different sensations in our bodies. We often don’t notice these bodily sensations.
Intuitively, we know what eye position can access the information in our brain that we need, but unprocessed stress and trauma is harder to reach due to where it’s stored.
Brainspotting helps us find the eye position that can unlock the unprocessed stress and trauma in our brains. Once we find the eye position and the unprocessed stress and trauma is unlocked, we quietly sit and allow our thoughts to flow while we hold the eye position. We give our brain the time it needs to process the stuck stress and let it go. Brainspotting helps us access deeper parts of the brain that traditional talk therapy can’t reach.
After a Brainspotting session, we can still remember the stressful or traumatic experience but how we feel about it has changed and our body responds to the memory differently. Instead of becoming overwhelmed or upset by the situation, it feels like something that happened in the past and it doesn’t bother us as much as it used to
What happens in a Brainspotting session?
Brainspotting is different from traditional talk therapies. In a Brainspotting session, I’ll ask you to focus on a specific issue that you want to address. Then we’ll check to see if you feel any activation (body sensations or emotions) around the issue in your body. After that, I’ll help you find a Brainspot (fixed eye position) that feels connected to the issue.
After we find the Brainspot, I’ll ask you to notice the thoughts, feelings, and body sensations that arise. This is called focused mindfulness. It’s not unusual for people to remember old memories, feel waves of emotions and body sensations, or to see images. Discomfort is a normal part of the process because we are dealing with painful experiences that were not able to be properly processed by your brain. I’ll be there to guide you through it safely.
Because Brainspotting is different from talk therapy, I will encourage you to keep noticing what comes up but I try to say as little as possible so that I don’t interrupt your deep processing. Your brain is amazing and can heal on its own if it’s given the time and space to. After you’ve finished Brainspotting, we’ll debrief what the experience was like for you.
How is Brainspotting different from EMDR?
Brainspotting and EMDR are brain-body based treatments that utilize the eyes, but they are different.
Brainspotting uses fixed eye positions to process issues and BioLateral music (sound that gently pans from one ear to the other) can be used to aid with processing.
EMDR uses bilateral eye movements (rapidly moving your eyes from side to side) to process issues. Other kinds of bilateral stimulation can be used if someone cannot tolerate eye movements, like tapping or sounds (sound that jumps from one ear to the other without being panned).
Some people find EMDR to be overstimulating, while Brainspotting can be a gentler experience. I have noticed that if someone has a bad experience with EMDR, they often have a better experience using Brainspotting.
Tips for Telehealth Brainspotting
- Have a pad of sticky notes handy
- Bring your headphones or earbuds to session
- Have the music queued up and ready to go if you prefer to control it yourself
- Have the music set on the lowest volume that you can hear
- Make sure you don’t have to hold your computer, tablet, or phone while we work together
- Make sure you’re in a quiet place where you can minimize noise
- Make sure you won’t be interrupted by anyone or anything
- Make sure that your technology is positioned so that I can see your face/eyes
- Plan to rest your body and mind after session